S-4680-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations.
Sponsored by Jacky Rosen (D-NV)
What it does
This bill would amend the Foreign Service Act of 1980 to allow the Secretary of State to appoint non-career personnel performing consular services for up to eight years — an increase from the current five-year limit. It would also allow an additional two-year extension beyond that eight-year term when the needs of the Foreign Service require it. These changes would apply specifically to personnel in the Consular Fellows Program and similar limited non-career positions, not to the broader career Foreign Service.
Who benefits
Current and prospective Consular Fellows and other limited non-career consular staff who would gain longer job security and career continuity. The State Department, which would reduce recruitment and training costs by retaining experienced personnel longer. U.S. embassies and consulates abroad, which would benefit from more experienced staffing. Visa applicants worldwide who may experience faster processing times due to a more experienced workforce. The U.S. travel and tourism industry, which depends on efficient visa processing to attract international visitors. American businesses and workers in the hospitality, sports, and events sectors tied to international visitor spending. U.S. citizens abroad who rely on consular services for passports, emergency assistance, and other services.
Who is hurt
Career Foreign Service Officers who may face increased competition for positions or advancement opportunities if non-career staff occupy roles for longer periods. Applicants for career Foreign Service positions, who may find fewer openings if non-career fellows remain in place longer. Foreign Service unions and professional associations that advocate for career-track employment. Taxpayers, to the extent that longer appointments increase total compensation costs, though the bill does not specify pay provisions.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the current five-year cap forces the State Department to repeatedly recruit and train new consular staff, creating inefficiencies and staffing gaps at a time of surging demand. They point to the bill's own findings: the travel and tourism sector contributed $2.3 trillion to the U.S. economy in 2022 and supported 9.5 million jobs, and upcoming international events like the FIFA World Cup and Olympic Games are expected to significantly increase visa application volumes. Retaining experienced consular officers longer, they argue, directly protects national security by preserving institutional knowledge in fraud detection and security vetting.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that extending non-career appointments to eight or ten years effectively creates a parallel, lower-cost workforce that undermines the professional career Foreign Service and the merit-based system it depends on. They contend that relying on long-term non-career staff to fill structural staffing shortfalls avoids addressing the root problem — inadequate hiring and retention of career officers — and may erode the quality and accountability standards that career-track training and oversight are designed to ensure. Critics may also note that the two-year discretionary extension grants the Secretary of State broad, loosely defined authority with limited congressional oversight.